Monday, June 10, 2013

WEST TO ATTACK IRAN IN NEXT TWO MONTHS?

AS YOU READ THE FOLLOWING ARTICLE NOTICE THE TIMELINE THE ISRAELI OFFICIAL STATES IN REGARDS TO IRAN'S NUCLEAR AMBITIONS AND ISRAEL'S SO CALLED "RED LINE."
HE STATES THAT IT COULD BE WEEKS OR MAYBE TWO MONTHS. THIS MEANS THAT
NOT ONLY WILL THE U.S. BE ARMING SYRIAN REBELS WITH LETHAL ASSISTANCE
http://www.usatoday.com/story/theoval/2013/06/10/obama-syria-arms-rebels-associated-press/2407537/

BUT IT ALSO MEANS THAT THE ILLUMINATI FEEL THAT EVENTS ARE STARTED TO SPIN OUT OF THEIR CONTROL AND THE NEED TO NOT ONLY ARM SYRIAN REBELS, BUT ALSO EITHER GREEN LIGHT, OR LEAD THE ATTACK ON IRAN ITSELF.
THIS WAS THE TIMELINE I OUTLINED BACK IN MARCH, STATING THAT THE FULL WORLD WAR WILL HAVE STARTED BY THE TIME THE COMET MAKES ITS APPEARANCE IN NOVEMBER.
LET US CONTINUE TO PRAY AND IF POSSIBLE, I URGE ALL WHO READ THIS BLOG TO PRAY THE MOST HOLY ROSARY. NOT ONLY FOR OURSELVES, BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY FOR THE CONVERSION AND REPENTENCE OF SINNERS AND THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS.
MAY OUR LORD, WHO IS FULL OF MERCY, SHOW US HIS MERCY DURING THIS MOST DARK OF TIMES IN HUMAN HISTORY.

10 June 2013 - 23H01  
Iran eyes 30 nuclear bombs a year: Israel minister
 
http://www.france24.com/en/20130610-iran-eyes-30-nuclear-bombs-year-israel-minister
 
Israeli Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz is pictured on December 6, 2012. Iran is working round the clock to enlarge its nuclear infrastructure with the eventual aim of developing an industry capable of building up to 30 bombs a year, an Israeli minister charged on Monday.
AFP - Iran is working round the clock to enlarge its nuclear infrastructure with the eventual aim of developing an industry capable of building up to 30 bombs a year, an Israeli minister charged on Monday.
Speaking to reporters in Jerusalem, Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz said Tehran was "very close" to crossing the red line laid out by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last year.
But he said it was biding its time and building uranium-enrichment facilities before making the final push for weapons-grade material.
"The Iranians are getting very close now to the red line... They have close to 200 kilos -- 190 kilos (418 pounds) -- of 20 percent enriched uranium," Steinitz said.
"Once they have 250 kilos, this is enough to make the final rush to 90 percent," the level of enrichment required for a nuclear warhead, he said in a presentation to the Foreign Press Association.
"It is a matter of weeks or maybe two months to jump from 20 percent to 90 percent with so many centrifuges," he said.
"What they are doing now -- instead of crossing the red line, they are widening and enlarging their capacity by putting in more centrifuges, faster centrifuges."
Iran's aim, he charged, was to build a nuclear arsenal, not just a single bomb.
"Many people are saying it's a question of the Iranian bomb - whether they will have it or not. No. We are speaking about an Iranian arsenal."
Tehran's big fear was that a Western military strike could wipe out their nuclear facilities "within a few hours," he said.
"The Iranians feel very vulnerable, especially from American air operations. This is their main concern -- that if the West, if NATO, if America decide to attack them, a few hours of accurate air raids might destroy their nuclear facilities."
Israel and many Western governments suspect Iran is using its civilian nuclear programme as cover for developing a weapons capability, a charge denied by Tehran.
But the Jewish state, the Middle East's sole, if undeclared, nuclear power, has refused to rule out a pre-emptive military strike to prevent it.
Steinitz also ruled out any change in policy that might result from the Iranian presidential elections which are to take place on Friday, saying the result was already known.
"Nothing is going to change. There will be, unfortunately, no significant changes because of these so-called elections because (supreme leader Ayatollah Ali) Khamenei has already won," he said.
"He is the leader and he makes the decisions and he already made his decision to spend many billions of dollars on building this nuclear industry with only one aim," he charged.
"The decision was already made to get nuclear weapons -- you don't spent so much money and you don't suffer $70 billion of losses (due to international sanctions) in one year only to show that you can spin some centrifuges," he concluded.

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